CHAPTER V.
A FAMOUS BARBECUE.
“So when fierce zeal
a nation rends,
And stern injustice rules the throne,
Beneath the yoke meek virtue bends,
And modest truth is heard to groan.
But when fair Freedom’s star appears,
Then hushed are sighs, and calmed are fears.
And who, when nations long opprest,
Decree to curb the oppressor’s pride,
And patriot virtues fire the breast,
Who shall the generous ardor chide?
What shall withstand the great decree,
When a brave nation will be free?
It is flesh and blood that makes husbands
and wives, fathers and children, and for the next
few days these ties were sorely wounded in Robert
Worth’s house. The Senora was what Rachela
called “difficult.” In reality, she
was angry and sullen. At such times she always
went early to mass, said many prayers, and still further
irritated herself by unnecessary fasting. But
there are few homes which totally escape the visitations
of this`pious temper in some form or other. And
no creed modifies it; the strict Calvinist and strict
Catholic are equally disagreeable while under its
influence.
Besides, the Senora, like the ill-tempered
prophet, thought she “did well to be angry.”
She imagined herself deserted and betrayed in all
her tenderest feelings, her husband a rebel, her home
made desolate, her sons and daughters supporting their
father’s imprudent views. She could only
see one alternative before her; she must choose between
her country and her religion, or her husband and children.
True, she had not yet heard from her
sons, but she would listen to none of Rachela’s
hopes regarding them. Thomas had always said
yes to all his father’s opinions. How could
she expect anything from John when he was being carefully
trained in the very principles which everywhere made
the Americans so irritating to the Mexican government.
Her husband and Antonia she would
not see. Isabel she received in her darkened
room, with passionate weeping and many reproaches.
The unhappy husband had expected this trouble at
the outset. It was one of those domestic thorns
which fester and hamper, but to which the very best
of men have to submit. He could only send pleasant
and affectionate messages by Rachela, knowing that
Rachela would deliver them with her own modifications
of tone and manner.
“The Senor sends his great love
to the Senora. Grace of Mary! If he would
do a little as the most wise and tender of spouses
wishes him! That would be for the good fortune
of every one.
“Ah, Rachela, my heart is broken!
Bring me my mantilla. I will go to early mass,
when one’s husband and children forsake them,
who, then, is possible but the Holy Mother?
“My Senora, you will take cold;
the morning is chill; besides, I have to say the streets
will be full of those insolent Americans.”
“I shall be glad to take cold,
perhaps even to die. And the Americans do not
offend women. Even the devil has his good points.”
“Holy Virgin! Offend women!
They do not even think us worth looking at.
But then it is an intolerable offence to see them
standing in our streets, as if they had made the whole
land.”
But this morning, early as it was,
the streets were empty of Americans. There had
been hundreds of them there at the proclamation; there
was not one to be seen twelve hours afterwards.
But at the principal rendezvous of the city, and
on the very walls of the Alamo, they had left this
characteristic notice:
“To Santa Anna:
If you want our arms-take them.
TEN THOUSAND AMERICAN TEXANS.
Robert Worth saw it with an irrepressible
emotion of pride and satisfaction. He had faithfully
fulfilled his promise to his conscience, and, with
his rifle across his shoulder, and his revolvers and
knife in his belt, was taking the road to his office
with a somewhat marked deliberation. He was yet
a remarkably handsome man; and what man is there that
a rifle does not give a kind of nobility to?
With an up-head carriage and the light of his soul
in his face, he trod the narrow, uneven street like
a soldier full of enthusiasm at his own commission.
No one interfered with his solitary
parade. He perceived, indeed, a marked approval
of it. The Zavalas, Navarros. Garcias,
and other prominent citizens, addressed him with but
a slightly repressed sympathy. They directed
his attention with meaning looks to the counter-proclamation
of the Americans. They made him understand by
the pressure of their hands that they also were on
the side of liberty.
As he did not hurry, he met several
officers, but they wisely affected not to see what
they did not wish to see. For Doctor Worth was
a person to whom very wide latitude might be given.
To both the military and the civilians his skill
was a necessity. The attitude he had taken was
privately discussed, but no one publicly acted or
even commented upon it. Perhaps he was a little
disappointed at this. He had come to a point
when a frank avowal of his opinions would be a genuine
satisfaction; when, in fact, his long-repressed national
feeling was imperious.
On the third morning, as he crossed
the Plaza, some one called him. The voice made
his heart leap; his whole nature responded to it like
the strings of a harp to the sweep of a skilful hand.
He turned quickly, and saw two young men galloping
towards him. The foremost figure was his son—his
beloved youngest son—whom he had just been
thinking of as well out of danger, safe and happy
in the peaceful halls of Columbia. And lo! here
he was in the very home of the enemy; and he was glad
of it.
“Why, Jack!” he cried;
“Why, Jack, my boy! I never thought of
you here.” He had his hand on the lad’s
shoulder, and was gazing into his bright face with
tears and smiles and happy wonder.
Father, I had to come. And there
are plenty more coming. And here is my other
self—the best fellow that ever lived:
Darius Grant. `Dare’ we call him, father,
for there is not anything he won’t venture if
he thinks it worth the winning. And how is mi
madre and Antonia, and Iza? And isn’t it
jolly to see you with a rifle?”
“Well, Dare; well, Jack; you
are both welcome; never so welcome to Texas as at
this hour. Come home at once and, refresh yourselves.”
There was so much to tell that at
first the conversation was in fragments and exclamations,
and the voices of the two young men, pitched high
and clear in their excitement, went far before them
as if impatient of their welcome. Antonia heard
them first. She was on the balcony, standing
thoughtful and attent. It seemed to her as if
in those days she was always listening. Jack’s
voice was the loudest, but she heard Dare’s
first. It vibrated in midair and fell upon her
consciousness, clear and sweet as a far-away bell.
“That is Dare’s voice— here.”
She leaned forward, her soul hearkened
after the vibrations, and again they called her.
With swift steps she reached the open door.
Rachela sat in her chair within it.
“The Senorita had better remain
within,” she said, sullenly; “the sun
grows hot.”
“Let me pass, Rachela, I am in a hurry.”
“To be sure, the Senorita will have her way—good
or bad.”
Antonia heeded her not; she was hastening
down the main avenue toward the gateway. This
avenue was hedged on each side with oleanders, and
they met in a light, waving arch above her head.
At this season they were one mass of pale pink blossoms
and dark glossy leaves. The vivid sunshine through
them made a rosy light which tinged her face and her
white gown with an indescribable glow. If a
mortal woman can ever look like an angel, the fair,
swiftly moving Antonia had at that moment the angelic
expression of joy and love; the angelic unconsciousness
of rapid and graceful movement; the angelic atmosphere
that was in itself a dream of paradise; rose-tinted,
divinely sweet and warm.
Dare saw her coming, and suddenly
ceased speaking{.??} He was in the midst of a sentence,
but he forgot what he was saying. He forgot
where he was. He knew nothing, felt nothing,
saw nothing, heard nothing but Antonia. And
yet he did not fall at her feet, and kiss her hands
and whisper delightful extravagances; all of which
things an Iberian lover would have done, and felt
and looked in the doing perfectly graceful and natural.
Dare Grant only clasped both the pretty
hands held out to him; only said “Antonia!
Antonia!” only looked at her with eyes full
of a loving question, which found its instant answer
in her own. In that moment they revealed to
each other the length and breadth, the height and
the depth of their affection. They had not thought
of disguising it; they made no attempt to do so; and
Robert Worth needed not the confession which, a few
hours later, Grant thought it right to make to him.
When they entered the house together,
a happy, noisy group, Rachela had left her chair and
was going hurriedly upstairs to tell the Senora her
surmise; but Jack passed her with a bound, and was
at his mother’s side before the heavy old woman
had comprehended his passing salutation.
“Madre! Mother, I am here!
The Senora was on her couch in her
darkened room. She had been at the very earliest
mass, had a headache, and had come home in a state
of rebellion against heaven and earth. But Jack
was her idol, the one child for whose presence she
continually pined, the one human creature to whose
will and happiness she delighted to sacrifice her
own. When she heard his voice she rose quickly,
crying out:
“A miracle! A miracle!
Grace of God and Mary, a miracle! Only this
morning, my precious, my boy! I asked the Holy
Mother to pity my sorrows, and send you to me.
I vow to Mary a new shrine. I vow to keep it,
and dress it for one whole year. I will give
my opal ring to the poor. Oh, Juan! Juan!
Juan I am too blessed.”
Her words were broken into pieces
by his kisses. He knelt at her knees, and stroked
her face, and patted her hands, and did all with such
natural fervor and grace, that anything else, or anything
less, must have seemed cold and unfilial.
“Come, my beautiful mother,
and see my friend. I have told him so much about
you; and poor Dare has no mother. I have promised
him that you will be his mother also. Dare is
so good—the finest fellow in all the world;
come down and see Dare, and let us have a real Mexican
dinner, madre. I have not tasted an olla since
I left you.”
She could not resist him. She
made Rachela lay out her prettiest dress, and when
Jack said “how beautiful your hair is, mother;
no one has hair like you!” she drew out the great
shell pins, and let it fall like a cloud around her,
and with a glad pride gave Rachela the order to get
out her jewelled comb and gilded fan and finest mantilla.
And oh! how happy is that mother who has such pure
and fervent admiration from her son; and how happy
is that son to whom his mother is ever beautiful!
Jack’s presence drove all the
evil spirits out of the house. The windows were
thrown open; the sunshine came in. He was running
after Isabel, he was playing the mandolin; his voice,
his laugh, his quick footstep, were everywhere.
In spite of the trouble in the city,
there was a real festival in the house. The
Senora came down in her sweetest temper and her finest
garments. She arranged Jack’s dinner herself,
selected the dishes and gave strict orders about their
serving. She took Jack’s friend at once
into her favor, and Dare thought her wonderfully lovely
and gracious. He sat with her on the balcony,
and talked of Jack, telling her how clever he was,
and how all his comrades loved him for his sunny temper
and affectionate heart.
It was a happy dinner, lengthened
out with merry conversation. Every one thought
that a few hours might be given to family love and
family joy. It would be good to have the memory
of them in the days that were fast coming. So
they sat long over the sweetmeats, and fresh figs,
and the pale wines of Xeres and Alicante. And
they rose up with laughter, looking into each others’
faces with eyes that seemed to bespeak love and remembrance.
And then they went from the table, and saw not Destiny
standing cold and pitiless behind them, marking two
places for evermore vacant.
There was not much siesta that day.
The Senora, Isabel and Jack sat together; the Senora
dozed a little, but not enough to lose consciousness
of Jack’s presence and Jack’s voice.
The father, happy, and yet acutely anxious, went
to and fro between his children and his study.
Antonia and Dare were in the myrtle walk or under
the fig-tree. This hour was the blossoming time
of their lives. And it was not the less sweet
and tender because of the dark shadows on the edge
of the sunshine. Nor were they afraid to face
the shadows, to inquire of them, and thus to taste
the deeper rapture of love when love is gemmed with
tears.
It was understood that the young men
were going away in the morning very early; so early
that their adieus must be said with their good-nights.
It was at this hour that the Senora found courage
to ask:
“My Juan, where do you go?
“To Gonzales, mi madre.”
“But why? Oh, Juan, do
not desert your madre, and your country!
“Desert you, madre! I
am your boy to my last breath! My country I
love with my whole soul. That is why I have come
back to you and to her! She is in trouble and
her sons must stand by her.”
“Do not talk with two meanings.
Oh, Juan! why do you go to Gonzales?”
“We have heard that Colonel
Ugartchea is to be there soon, and to take away the
arms of the Americans. That is not to be endured.
If you yourself were a man, you would have been away
ere this to help them, I am sure.”
“Me!! The Blessed
Virgin knows I would cut off my hands and feet first.
Juan, listen to me dear one! You are a Mexican.”
“My heart is Mexican, for it
is yours. But I must stand with my father and
with my brother, and with my American compatriots.
Are we slaves, that we must give up our arms?
No, but if we gave them up we should deserve to be
slaves.”
“God and the saints!”
she answered, passionately. “What a trouble
about a few guns! One would think the Mexicans
wanted the wives and children, the homes and lands
of the Americans. They cry out from one end
of Texas to the other.”
“They cry out in old England
and in New England, in New York, in New Orleans, and
all down the Mississippi. And men are crying
back to them: `Stand to your rifles and we will
come and help you!’ The idea of disarming ten
thousand Americans!” Jack laughed with scornful
amusement at the notion. “What a game
it will be! Mother, you can’t tell how
a man gets to love his rifle. He that takes
our purse takes trash; but our rifles! By George
Washington, that’s a different story!”
Juan, my darling, you are my last
hope. Your brother was born with an American
heart. He has even become a heretic. Fray
Ignatius says he went into the Colorado and was what
they call immersed; he that was baptized with holy
water by the thrice holy bishop of Durango.
My beloved one, go and see Fray Ignatius; late as
it is, he will rise and counsel you.
“My heart, my conscience, my
country, my father, my brother, Santa Anna’s
despotism, have already counselled me.”
“Speak no more. I see
that you also are a rebel and a heretic. Mother
of sorrows, give me thy compassion!” Then,
turning to Juan, she cried out: “May God
pardon me for having brought into this world such
ingrates! Go from me! You have broken
my heart!
He fell at her feet, and, in spite
of her reluctance, took her hands—
“Sweetest mother, wait but a
little while. You will see that we are right.
Do not be cross with Juan. I am going away.
Kiss me, mother. Kiss me, and give me your
blessing.”
“No, I will not bless you.
I will not kiss you. You want what is impossible,
what is wicked.”
“I want freedom.”
“And to get freedom you tread
upon your mother’s heart. Let loose
my hands. I am weary to death of this everlasting
talk of freedom. I think indeed that the Americans
know but two words: freedom and dollars.
Ring for Rachela. She, at least, is faithful
to me.”
“Not till you kiss me, mother.
Do not send me away unblessed and unloved.
That is to doom me to misfortune. Mi madre,
I beg this favor from you.” He had risen,
but he still held her hands, and he was weeping as
innocent young men are not ashamed to weep.
If she had looked at him! Oh,
if she had but once looked at his face, she could
not have resisted its beauty, its sorrow, its imploration!
But she would not look. She drew her hands
angrily away from him. She turned her back upon
her suppliant son and imperiously summoned Rachela.
“Good-by, mi madre.”
“Good-by, mi madre!”
She would not turn to him, or answer him a word.
“Mi madre, here comes Rachela!
Say `God bless you, Juan.’ It is my last
word, sweet mother!”
She neither moved nor spoke.
The next moment Rachela entered, and the wretched
woman abandoned herself to her care with vehement
sobs and complainings.
Jack was inexpressibly sorrowful.
He went into the garden, hoping in its silence and
solitude to find some relief. He loved his mother
with his strongest affection. Every one of her
sobs wrung his heart. Was it right to wound and
disobey her for the sake of—freedom?
Mother was a certain good; freedom only a glorious
promise. Mother was a living fact; freedom an
intangible idea.
Ah, but men have always fought more
passionately for ideas than for facts! Tyrants
are safe while they touch only silver and gold; but
when they try to bind a man’s ideals—the
freedom of his citizenship—the purity of
his faith—he will die to preserve them
in their integrity.
Besides, freedom for every generation
has but her hour. If that hour is not seized,
no other may come for the men who have suffered it
to pass. But mother would grow more loving as
the days went by. And this was ever the end of
Jack’s reasoning; for no man knows how deep
the roots of his nature strike into his native land,
until he sees her in the grasp of a tyrant, and hears
her crying to him for deliverance.
The struggle left the impress on his
face. He passed a boundary in it. Certain
boyish feelings and graces would never again be possible
to him. He went into the house, weary, and longing
for companionship that would comfort or strengthen
him. Only Isabel was in the parlor. She
appeared to be asleep among the sofa cushions, but
she opened her eyes wide as he took a chair beside
her.
“I have been waiting to kiss
you again, Juan; do you think this trouble will last
very long?”
“It will be over directly, Iza.
Do not fret yourself about it, angel mio. The
Americans are great fighters, and their quarrel is
just. Well, then, it will be settled by the good
God quickly.”
“Rachela says that Santa Anna
has sent off a million of men to fight the Americans.
Some they will cut in pieces, and some are to be
sent to the mines to work in chains.”
“God is not dead of old age,
Iza. Santa Anna is a miraculous tyrant.
He has committed every crime under heaven, but I
think he will not cut the Americans in pieces.”
“And if the Americans should
even make him go back to Mexico!”
“I think that is very possible.”
“What then, Juan?”
“He would pay for some of his
crimes here the rest he would settle for in purgatory.
And you, too, Iza, are you with the Americans?”
“Luis Alveda says they are right.”
“Oh-h! I see! So
Luis is to be my brother too. Is that so, little
dear?”
“Have you room in your heart
for him? Or has this Dare Grant filled it?”
“If I had twenty sisters, I
should have room for twenty brothers, if they were
like Dare and Luis. But, indeed, Luis had his
place there before I knew Dare.”
“And perhaps you may see him
soon; he is with Senor Sam Houston. Senor Houston
was here not a week ago. Will you think of that?
And the mother and uncle of Luis are angry at him;
he will be disinherited, and we shall be very poor,
I think. But there is always my father, who
loves Luis.”
“Luis will win his own inheritance.
I think you will be very rich.”
“And, Juan, if you see Luis,
say to him, `Iza thinks of you continually.’”
At this moment Rachela angrily called her charge—
“Are you totally and forever
wicked, disobedient one? Two hours I have been
kept waiting. Very well! The, Sisters are
the only duenna for you; and back to the convent you
shall go to-morrow. The Senora is of my mind,
also.”
“My father will not permit it.
I will go to my father. And think of this,
Rachela: I am no longer to be treated like a
baby.” But she kissed Juan `farewell,’
and went away without further dispute.
The handsome room looked strangely
lonely and desolate when the door had closed behind
her. Jack rose, and roughly shook himself, as
if by that means he hoped to throw off the oppression
and melancholy that was invading even his light heart.
Hundreds of moths were dashing themselves to death
against the high glass shade that covered the blowing
candles from them. He stood and looked at their
hopeless efforts to reach the flame. He had
an unpleasant thought; one of those thoughts which
have the force of a presentiment. He put it
away with annoyance, muttering, “It is time enough
to meet misfortune when it comes.”
The sound of a footstep made him stand
erect and face the door.
It was only a sleepy peon with a request
that he would go to his father’s study.
A different mental atmosphere met him there.
The doctor was walking up and down the room, and Dare
and Antonia sat together at the open window.
“Your father wants to hear about
our journey, Jack. Take my chair and tell him
what happened. Antonia and I will walk within
hearing; a roof makes me restless such a night as
this”; for the waning moon had risen, and the
cool wind from the Gulf was shaking a thousand scents
from the trees and the flowering shrubs.
The change was made with the words,
and the doctor sat down beside his son. “I
was asking, Jack, how you knew so much about Texan
affairs, and how you came so suddenly to take part
in them?”
“Indeed, father, we could not
escape knowing. The Texan fever was more or
less in every young man’s blood. One night
Dare had a supper at his rooms, and there were thirty
of us present. A man called Faulkner—a
fine fellow from Nacogdoches—spoke to us.
How do you think he spoke, when his only brother,
a lad of twenty, is working in a Mexican mine loaded
with chains?”
“For what?”
“He said one day that `the natural
boundaries of the United States are the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans.’ He was sent to the mines
for the words. Faulkner’s only hope for
him is in the independence of Texas. He had
us on fire in five minutes—all but Sandy
McDonald, who loves to argue, and therefore took the
Mexican side.”
“What could he say for it?”
“He said it was a very unjustlike
thing to make Mexico give her American settlers in
Texas two hundred and twenty-four millions of acres
because she thought a change of government best for
her own interests.”
“The Americans settled in Texas
under the solemn guarantee of the constitution of
eighteen twenty-four. How many of them would
have built homes under a tyrannical despotism like
that Santa Anna is now forcing upon them?” asked
the doctor, warmly.
“McDonald said, `There is a
deal of talk about freedom among you Americans, and
it just means nothing at all.’ You should
have seen Faulkner! He turned on him like a tornado.
`How should you know anything about freedom, McDonald?’
he cried. `You are in feudal darkness in the Highlands
of Scotland. You have only just emigrated into
freedom. But we Americans are born free!
If you can not feel the difference between a federal
constitution and a military and religious despotism,
there is simply no use talking to you. How would
you like to find yourself in a country where suddenly
trial by jury and the exercise of your religion was
denied you? Of course you could abandon the
home you had built, and the acres you had bought and
put under cultivation, and thus make some Mexican
heir to your ten years’ labor. Perhaps
a Scot, for conscience’ sake, would do this.’”
“And what answer made he?”
He said, `A Scot kens how to grip tight to ten years’
labor as well as yoursel’, Faulkner; and neither
man nor de’il can come between him and his religion;
but—’ `but,’ shouted Faulkner;
`there is no but! It is God and our right!
God and our right, against priestcraft and despotism!’”
“Then every one of us leaped
to our feet, and we swore to follow Faulkner to Texas
at an hour’s notice; and Sandy said we were
`a parcel of fools’; and then, would you believe
it, father, when our boat was leaving the pier, amid
the cheers and hurrahs of thousands, Sandy leaped
on the boat and joined us?”
“What did he say then?”
“He said, `I am a born fool
to go with you, but I think there is a kind o’
witchcraft in that word Texas. It has been
stirring me up morning and night like the voice o’
the charmer, and I be to follow it though I ken well
enough it isna leading me in the paths o’ peace
and pleasantness!’”
“Did you find the same enthusiasm
outside of New York?”
“All along the Ohio and Mississippi
we gathered recruits; and at Randolph, sixty miles
above Memphis, we were joined by David Crockett.”
“Jack!”
“True, father! And then
at every landing we took on men. For at every
landing Crockett spoke to the people; and, as we stopped
very often, we were cheered all the way down the river.
The Mediterranean, though the biggest boat on it,
was soon crowded; but at Helena, Crockett and a great
number of the leading men of the expedition got off.
And as Dare and Crockett had become friends, I followed
them.”
“Where did you go to?”
“We went ostensibly to a big
barbecue at John Bowie’s plantation, which is
a few miles below Helena. Invitations to this
barbecue had been sent hundreds of miles throughout
the surrounding country. We met parties from
the depths of the Arkansas wilderness and the furthest
boundaries of the Choctaw nation coming to it.
There were raftsmen from the Mississippi, from the
White, and the St. Francis rivers. There were
planters from Lousiana and Tennessee. There were
woodsmen from Kentucky. There were envoys from
New Orleans, Washington, and all the great Eastern
cities.”
“I had an invitation myself, Jack.”
“I wish you had accepted it.
It was worth the journey. There never was and
there never will be such a barbecue again. Thousands
were present. The woods were full of sheds and
temporary buildings, and platforms for the speakers.”
“Who were the speakers?”
“Crockett, Hawkins, General
Montgomery, Colonel Beauford, the three brothers Cheatham,
Doc. Bennet, and many others. When the
woods were illuminated at night with pine knots, you
may imagine the scene and the wild enthusiasm that
followed their eloquence.”
“Doc. Bennet is a good
partisan, and he is enormously rich.”
“And he has a personal reason
for his hatred of Mexico. An insatiable revenge
possesses him. His wife and two children were
barbarously murdered by Mexicans. He appealed
to those who could not go to the fight to give money
to aid it, and on the spot laid down ten thousand
dollars.”
“Good!”
“Nine other men, either present
or there by proxy, instantly gave a like sum, and
thirty thousand in smaller sums was added to it.
Every donation was hailed with the wildest transports,
and while the woods were ringing with electrifying
shouts, Hawkins rallied three hundred men round him
and went off at a swinging galop for the Brazos.”
“Oh, Jack! Jack!”
In another hour, the rest of the leaders
had gathered their detachments, and every man had
turned his face to the Texan prairies. Crockett
was already far advanced on the way. Sam Houston
was known to be kindling the fire on the spot; and
I suppose you know, father,” said Jack, sinking
his voice to a whisper, “that we have still
more powerful backers.”
“General Gaines?”
“Well, he has a large body of
United States troops at Nacogdoches. He says
they are to protect the people of Navasola from the
Indians.”
“But Navasola is twenty-nine
miles west of Nacogdoches.”
“Navasola is in Texas.
Very well! If the United States feel it to
be their duty to protect the people of Navasola, it
seems they already consider Texas within their boundary.”
“You think the Indians a mere pretext?”
“Of course. Crockett has
with him an autograph letter from President Jackson,
introducing him as `a God-chosen patriot.’
President Jackson already sees Texas in the Union,
and Gaines understands that if the American-Texans
should be repulsed by Santa Anna, and fall back upon
him, that he may then gather them under his standard
and lead them forward to victory—and the
conquest of Texas. Father, you will see the Stars
and Stripes on the palaces of Mexico.”
“Do not talk too fast, Jack.
And now, go lie down on my bed. In four hours
you must leave, if you want to reach Gonzales to-night!”
Then Dare was called, and the lovers
knew that their hour of parting was come. They
said nothing of the fears in their hearts; and on
Antonia’s lifted face there was only the light
of love and of hope.
“The fight will soon be over, darling, and then!”
“And then? We shall be so happy.”